- Friday afternoon, the FDA approved Kadmon Holdings Inc's KDMN REZUROCK to treat chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD), a serious complication of transplant procedures.
- Formerly known as belumodsil, the drug is a first-in-class ROCK2 inhibitor and now Kadmon's first approved drug.
- cGVHD occurs when donor cells mount an immune response against a patient's tissues and organs, leading to inflammation and fibrosis in multiple tissues.
- The FDA based its REZUROCK approval on data from an open-label trial called ROCKstar that enrolled 65 patients who had previously tried between two and five different treatments.
- Of the 65 patients in the study given 200mg of Rezurock twice daily, just under half of them had four or more organs affected by the disease.
- 6% of patients achieved a complete response and 69% partial response, Kadmon said.
- 62% of responders didn't require new systemic therapy for at least 12 months. The median time to first response was 1.8 months.
- The FDA approval came six weeks ahead of the agency's decision deadline of 30 August.
- REZUROCK won't be available until the end of August, Kadmon said.
- Price Action: KDMN shares are up 0.23% at $4.29 during the premarket session on the last check Monday.
- Related content: Benzinga's Full FDA Calendar.
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